Ff 



(cQ\ 



I^IE 




Book TX ^6 



1303-1904. 

PRESIDENT. 

DR. ALBERT SHAW. 
VICE-PRESIDENTS. 

W. R. MERRIAM, E. W. WINTER, 

W. R CLOUGH, W. D. CORNISH. 

SECRETARY. 

W. F. NEWELL. 

TREASURER. 

W. B. T. KEYSER. 

,., ^ ^ GOVERNING COMMITTEE. 

* ;*;»,' .'Drv A.lbert Shaw. 
Thomas F.* t)AKES-:,, J :'■," ;--* .'\ John Henry Hammond, 
W. H. Noj^THROP, "* ' '• ''•M5."-,W' McCord, 

Jacob Lv {jreats'iKtcj^x, ,», . ,, , Francis F. McIver, 

Cass Gilbert, • • > . -' ' *• ' /. ?, * /" AV. .F, Newell. 



(§f^tt of ^^rriftarg. 

Suite 301-302, Blair Building, No. 24 Broad Street, 
Telephone: j^^ | Cortlandt. New York City. 



Pr^far^* 



New York long- ago ceased to belong to the 
New Yorkers. It has come to belong to the 
country at large. Every first-class country, when 
it reaches a certain stage of development, is bound 
to evolve a central point as a great national 
rendezvous for exchange and distribution— in 
short, for clearing-house purposes in a variety of 
directions. The European world, in developing 
national centers like Lor? doi«, Paris, Berlin, and 
Vienna, has noxy ' beep , followed by the United 
States in the dWelopment of New York. 

In earlier days, before New York had gained 
this kind of primacy, people came here to identify 
themselves with the town, and in so doing to 
lose altogether their identity with the places from 
which they came. In this later stage, however— 
where New York no longer belongs to New 
Yorkers but to the whole country, and where it 
becomes necessary for almost every large busi- 
ness to have its New York office, and for men of 






)r. 



diverse or widespread interests to spend more or 
less of their time in New York — it has become 
entirely possible as well as highly proper that men 
should preserve their identity with the States or 
sections from which they come, while assuming- 
their fair share of responsibility for the metrop- 
olis itself. Thus it has come to pass that in 
recent years there has been a large growth 
of organizations and societies recognizing the 
desirability of preserving the home feeling and 
connection. The New England Society, of 
course, is of venerable origin, and the Southern 
Society is of ever-^swelling dimensions. The 
Ohio Society and the Pennsylvania Society have 
become bodies of influence, prestige, and impor- 
tance. 

Besides these four, several other State societies 
have been formed, and among the most hopeful 
of these is the Minnesota Society, which is 
meant to include not merely the native sons of the 
splendid State at the headwaters of the Missis- 
sippi, but also all others who by virtue of years of 
residence and activity in Minnesota, or of other 
vital connection with the State, feel that it is both 
grateful and pleasant to avow and to preserve the 
memory of life spent in the State and of asso- 
ciation with Minnesota's men of aifairs. 

Where the nation has developed a real metrop- 



olis, the centripetal forces are bound to draw 
from every State a quota of active and energetic 
men to do their share of the business at the cen- 
ter of things. Minnesota has, for a young State, 
certainly been drawn upon by New York for its 
full share. When in 1901 the Minnesota Society 
was tentatively organized, its projectors had in 
sight about fifty possible members. But in due 
time they found tliat there vv-ere in New York 
and vicinity a possible membership of several 
hundred eligible and desirable men. Of these 
tlie club has made a list of more than 300, of 
whom, at present, 128 have definitely joined the 
Society as resident members. There are, further- 
more, a large number of well-known Minnesota 
men in public life, business life, and professional 
life, whose affairs frequently bring them to New 
York, and 137 of these are now enrolled by the 
Minnesota Society of New York as non-resident 
members. It is hoped that the resident mem- 
bership may in the near future grow to at least 
200, and that the non-resident membership may 
keep even pace. 

The first dinner of Minnesotians was held in 
the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, April 23, 1902, Mr. 
Alvin W. Krech presiding. The invitations to 
this dinner read as follows : 



Yon are cordially invited to attend 

the 

FIRST ANNUAL DINNBR 

of 

MINNBSOTIANS 

Nozv resident in Nezir York City, 

at seven o'clock, 

Wednesday evening, April the tzventy-third, 

nineteen hundred and tzvo, 

Waldorf-Astoria. 

kxe:cutive: committee:. 

Wii^LiAM H. Truesdale, 
President, Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad. 
Jacob L. Greatsinger, 

President, Brooklyn Rapid Transit. 
Frederick D. Underwood, 

President, Brie Railroad. 

Alvin W. Krech, 
Vice-President, The Mercantile Trust Company. 
Francis F. McIver (Secretary), 

at Sutro Bros, and Company. 



Charles A. Towne, 

President, Charles A. Towne Company. 
Franklin W. M. Cutcheon, 

of Hornhlower, Byrne, Miller and Potter, 
Charles M. Palmer, 

Publisher. 
Don H. Bacon, 
President, Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company. 
William B. T. Keyser (Treasurer), 

Cashier, Merchants' National Bank. 

Interesting speeches were made by ex-Gov- 
emor Wm. R. Merriam of Minnesota, Mr. 
Charles A. Towne, Mr. Alvin W. Krech, Capt. 
Henry A. Castle and C. A. Severance. 

Out of this occasion grew the formal organiza- 
tion of this Society, which began its series of 
annual dinners at the Waldorf-Astoria on Nov- 
ember lo, 1902, on which occasion Mr. Frank 
F. Davis presided and important addresses were 
made by Dr. Albert Shaw, Archbishop Ireland, 
Mr. Wheeler H. Peckham, Rev. Dr. James Bur- 
rill. 

On April 23, 1903, at the same place, a meeting 
of this Society was held for annual election of 
officers with a " Grill " supper and a programme 
of entertainment. Souvenir steins, designed 
especially for the occasion, were distributed 
amongst those present. 



The beginnings of the Alinnesota Society have 
been most favorably noted by the press of St. 
Paul and Minneapolis and of the entire State, 
and have also been recognized with equal good- 
will by the newspapers of New York. It is con- 
fidently believed that the Society can be made 
not only useful and agreeable to its members, 
but also in incidental ways worthy of considera- 
tion by the State and people of Minnesota. The 
constant growth of the State in prosperity and 
in all the attributes of a splendid commonwealth 
is always noted with satisfaction by the speakers 
at the reunions of the Society. 



(§ffittVB mi (BcmmnUt. 

1302-1903. 



PRESIDENT. 

ALVIN W. KRECH. 

VICE=PRESIDENTS. 

Jacob L. Greatsinger, William H. Truesdale, 
Charles M. Palmer, F. W. M. Cutcheon. 

SECRETARY. 

FRANCIS F. McIVER. 

TREASURER. 

W. B. T. KEYSER. 

GOVERNING COMMITTEE. 

Alvin W. Krech, 

George McNeir, D. D. Merrill, 

Frank F. Davis, Gilbert G. Thorne, 

William D. Cornish, Charles A. Towne, 

Francis F. McIver, Henry C. Knox. 



(donflttttttian 

OF THB 



ARTICLE I. 

Name. 

This organization shall be known as the Min- 
nesota Society of New York. 

ARTICLE II. 
Object. 

Its purpose shall be to cultivate social inter- 
course among its members, to advance their com- 
mon interests, and to preserve pleasant memories 
of the State of Minnesota. 

ARTICLE III. 
Membership. 

Section i. There shall be three classes of 
members : Active, non-resident, and honorary. 

Section 2. Any male person over eighteen 
years of age residing in the City of New York 



or within a distance of twenty-five miles there- 
from wlio is a native, or descendant of a native 
of the State of Minnesota, or who was a resident 
of Minnesota for a continuous period of two 
years, may be achnittcd as an active member. 

Sfxtion 3. Any male person over eighteen 
years of age, otherwise qualified for active mem- 
])ership, but not residing in the City of New York 
nor within the distance of twenty-five miles there- 
from, may be admitted as a non-resident member. 

Section 4. Any male person over eighteen 
years of age whose distinction shall, in the opin- 
ion of three-fourths of the Governing Committee, 
merit, may be admitted as an honorary member, 
but not more than four such members shall be 
admitted within one year. 

Section 5. Non-resident and honorary mem- 
bers shall be entitled to all the privileges of the 
Society, except they shall not vote or hold office. 

ARTICLE IV. 
Government. 

Section i. The Government of this Society 
shall be vested in a President, four Vice-Presi- 
dents, a Secretary, a Treasurer, and nine Trus- 
tees. The Board of Trustees together with the 



President and Secretary shall be the Governing 
Committee. 

Section 2. The Governing Committee shall 
appoint from its own number or from the 
Society at large the committees needful for the 
business of the Society, and it may declare and 
fill vacancies at any time in any committee. 

ARTICLE V. 
omcers. 

Section i. The President, or in his absence 
one of the Vice-Presidents, shall preside at all 
meetings of the Society and of the Governing 
Committee and give the casting vote in case of 
tie. The President shall with the Secretary sign 
all written contracts and obligations of the 
Society. 

Section 2. The Secretary shall keep a true 
record of all meetings of the Society and of the 
Governing Committee ; shall keep a correct roll 
of the members of the Society ; shall be the legal 
custodian of all papers, documents, and records 
of the Society; shall conduct the correspondence 
of the Society and of the Governing Committee; 
shall notify members of their election ; issue and 
send the members notices of all meetings of the 
Society and of the Governing Committee and all 
other notices required by the Constitution and 



By-Laws, and discharge such other duties as may 
be assigned to him by the Society or the 
President. 

Section 3. The Treasurer shall receive the 
funds of the Society and disburse them under the 
direction of the Governing Committee. His 
reports and accounts shall be audited by the 
Governing Committee. 

Section 4. The Governing Committee shall 
manage the general affairs of the Society subject 
to such instructions and limitations as may be 
prescribed by the Societ}^ It shall control and 
manage the property of the Society and enforce 
obedience to its rules. It shall approve all 
expenditures and contracts. It shall at each 
annual meeting make a full report of its pro- 
ceedings. It shall meet upon the call of the 
President or at the request in writing of six 
members thereof, and seven members thereof 
shall be necessary to constitute a quorum for the 
transaction of business, but a lesser number shall 
have power to adjourn. 

ARTICLE VI. 
Da eg. 

Section i. Each active member of the So- 
ciety shall pay to the Treasurer an entrance fee 
of five dollars and annual dues of five dollars. 



Section 2. Each non-resident member of the 
Society shall pay to the Treasurer an entrance 
fee of five dollars and annual dues of two dollars. 

Section 3. Honorary members shall be ex- 
empt from the payment of fees and dues. 

Section 4. All annual dues shall be due and 
payable on Jan. ist in each year, and any mem- 
ber failing to pay such annual dues or any other 
indebtedness to the Society for two months after 
the .same shall be due, may be suspended or ex- 
pelled from the Society by the Governing Com- 
mittee. 

Section 5. The entrance fee shall be due and 
payable at once upon the receipt by the member 
of notice of his election. 



ARTICLE VII. 

Meetings. 

Section i. The annual meeting of the So- 
ciety shall be held on the second Tuesday of the 
month of April. 

Section 2. Special meetings of the Society 
may be called from time to time by the President 
on the written request of four members of the 
Governing Committee or of fifteen active mem- 
bers ; twenty-five members shall constitute a quo- 

13 



rum for the transaction of business, but a less 
number may adjourn from time to time to a day 
certain. 

Section 3. Notice of all meetings shall be 
mailed at least three days before the day fixed 
therefor. 

ARTICLE VIII. 
Nominations. 

Section i. At least thirty days prior to the 
annual meeting the Governing Committee shall \ 
meet to recommend candidates for the offices to 
be filled at the succeeding annual election. 

Section 2. The Governing Committee shall 
send by mail a copy of a complete ticket for the 
offices to be filled to each member at least fifteen 
days prior to the election. 

ARTICLE IX. 

Elections. 

Immediately after the adoption of this consti- 
tution and at all subsequent annual meetings all t* 
the officers of the Society and the members of 
the Governing Committee shall be elected for the 
term of one year, but the term of every officer 
shall continue until his successor has been elected 
and installed. All vacancies occurring during the 
year among the officers and members of the Gov- 

14 



eming Committee by resignation or otherwise 
may be filled for the unexpired term by the Gov- 
erning Committee. 

ARTICLE X. 

Suspensions and Resignations. 

Section i. The Governing Committee may 
by a vote of seven of its members at a meeting 
thereof suspend any member of the Society who 
in their judgment shall have been guilty of con- 
duct warranting such action. Such suspension 
shall continue until the next annual meeting of 
the Society, when, unless the same be then re- 
voked by vote of a majority of the active mem- 
bers present, such suspended member shall cease 
to be a member of the Society. Due notice of 
the cause of such suspension shall be given to 
such member, who shall have an opportunity to 
be heard by the Governing Committee before 
suspension, and by the Society at its next annual 
meeting. 

Section 2. All resignations shall be made in 
writing to the Secretary to be acted on by the 
Governing Committee, but such resignation shall 
not be accepted until all indebtedness to the So- 
ciety by the resigning member shall have been 
discharged. 

15 



ARTICLE XI. 
Amendments. 

This Constitution may be amended at any an- 
nual meeting of the Society by an affirmative 
vote of three- fourths of the active members pres- 
ent, provided notice of such proposed amend- 
ment be mailed at least fifteen days before the 
date of such annual meeting to each active mem- 
ber at his address as the same shall appear on the 
membership book of the Society. 

ARTICLE XII. 
By-'Laws- 

The Governing Committee shall be authorized 
to promulgate a code of By-Laws for the Society 
and to alter, amend, or repeal any part of the 
same, subject always to the right of the Society 
at any meeting called for the purpose to reject 
the same. 



i6 



Ul^mb^ra Bftift Mmn^Botu S^nmtjs of NrttJ fork. 



RESIDENT. 



Avery, Edward S. 

Bacon, Selden 
Bacon, Don H. . 
BiGELow, Lewis Sherrill 
Babcock, Courtlandt . 
Baker S. G. 
BocHOW, Maxwell H. 
Buchanan, David 
BiERBAUER, Dr. Bruno W. 

Bacon, George V. 
Bailey, E. G. 
Bristol, Henry M. 

Calderwood, John Frank 
Cravath, Paul 
Cornish, William D. 
Clough. W. p. . . 
Connor, Thomas C. . 
Corcoran, John J. 
Cannon, H. W. 
Cutcheon, Franklin W. M 
Cochrane, Thomas, Jr. 
Cravath, William B. 
Cloyd, David E. 

Dahlgren, Eric B. . 
Davis, Frank F. 
Davis, Henry C. 
Dumont, Charles W. 



751 Fifth Ave. 

43 Cedar Street 
100 Broadway 

I West 72d Street 

44 Pine Street 
170 Broadway 
8 Perry Street 
69 Wall Street 

47 Pierrepont Street, Brooklyn, 
N. Y. 

45 Broadway 

136 Water Street 
256 Broadway 

476 1st Street, Brooklyn 
40 Wall Street 
120 Broadway 
32 Liberty Street 
191 Fulton Street 
290 Broadway 

53 Cedar Street 
24 Broad Street 

320 Central Park West 
15 Broad Street 

54 William Street 

56 Broadway 
35 Nassau Street 
20 Broad Street 
76 William Street 



«7 



Ellis, Charles E. 



713 Temple Court 



Folds, George R. 
Farrington, W. C. . 
Fraker, E. p. . 
forepaugh, w. f. 
GiLMAN. Edward R. 
Gilbert, Cass 

GOODSELL, WiLLARD R. 

Gregory, William R. 
Greatsinger, Jacob L. 
Greer, V/m. Jas, 
Graham, George Wallace 
Garrett, L. D. . 
Gilbert, Charles B. 
Gilbert, Samuel 

Hammond, John Henry 
Haskell, William Edwin 
Harris, Charles Taylor 
Hayes, George W. Jr. 
Harriman, Frank W. 
Haynes, Frederick E. 
Haney, Charles F. 
Hubbell, William C. 



18 Pierrepont St., Brooklyn. 

Pier 25 N. River 

The Ramon, 57th Street 

45 Broadway 

2-4-6 Cliff Street 

79 Wall Street 

12 Duane Street 

A 4-5-6 Produce Exchange 

168 Montague St., Brooklyn 

56-58 Pine Street 

170 Broadway 

29 Liberty Street 
436 Fifth Avenue 
79 Wall Street 

30 Broad Street 

" American and Journal." 
156 Fifth Avenue 
35 Nassau Street 
Holland House 
1867 7th Avenue 
42 West 83d Street 
143 West nth Street 



Ingersoll, Henry Gilbert 51 West 51st Street 



Jones, William O. 
Johnstone, E. R. 
Jaccaci, a. F. 



214 Broadway 
187 Broadway 
2417 Park Row Bldg. 



Knapp, C. D. Jr. 
Kling, Joseph 
Kessler, Julius 
Knox, Adrian M. 



31 Nassau Street 

27 William Street 

World Building 

407 Temple Court Building 

18 



k0i,ff, corneuus g. 
Krech, Alvin \V. 
Keysef. W. B. T. 
Knox, Henry C. 

LeBlanc, Alexis 
Langdon, John Henry 
Little, Luther B. 
Lee, Henry T. 
Lachmund, Carl V. 
Leeds, Charles Starr 

Merrill, Daniel D. . 
Merrill, Leavitt K. . 
MiDDLETON, Richard W. 
McIvER, Francis F. 



McNaught, James 
McNeir, George 
McKinlay, David Arthur 
McCord, David Walter 
McMuLLEN, Arthur . 
McDonough, William H. 
Merriam, W. R. 

Northrop, William G. 
Newell, W. F. 

Oppenheim, Ansel 
Oakes, Thomas Fletcher 

Phillips, S. A. 
Palmer, Charles M. 
Perfect, W. G. 
Peckham, Wheeler H. 
Potter, George W. 



50 Broadway 
15 Nassau Street 
42 Wall Street 
170 Broadwa)' 

39 Whitehall Street 
Hotel Spalding 
Fifth Avenue Hotel 
64 West 46th Street 
132 West 85th Street 
59 Wall Street 

9 & II E. i6th Street 

9 & II E. i6th Street 

18 Vesey Street 

Merchants' Nat. Bank Bldg., 42 

Wall Street 
35 Nassau Street 
884 Broadway 
150 Fifth Ave. 
24 Broad Street 
374 Fifth Avenue 
116 Nassau Street 
346 Broadway 

38 West 52d Street 
24 Broad Street 

Waldorf-Astoria 
7 Wall Street 

251 W. 93d Street 
253 Broadway 
150 Nassau Street 
128 West 58th Street 
346 Broadway 



19 



Rice, Chari^es W. 
Rhame, George A. 
Rutherford, H. V. 
Richards, Wilus B. 
Richards, Harry 

Searle, Franklin E. 
Stem, A. H. 
Smith, Chari.es F. 
Shaw, Albert 
Speel, John N. . 
Sherin, Clarence E. 
Stobbart, Arthur J. 
Stone, Lane Kimball 
Secor, Clarence E. 

Thurston, Wm. H. . 
Thrall, Nelson C. 
Truesdale, William H. 
TowNE, Charles A, 
Thorne, Gilbert G. 
Thorne, James 
Topping, C. H. 

Underwood, F. D. 

Vinton, Merrick E. 
Vander Velde, N. J. T. 
Van Cleve, George B. 

Warner, James Harold 
Wallace, David 
Waterbury, Lester J. 
Ware, Henry A. 
Watson, Louis T. 
Winter. E. W. 

York, James Edwin . 



391 Lewis Ave., Brooklyn 
109 Leffert Place, Brooklyn 
31 Nassau Street 

30 Pine Street 
Fifth Avenue Hotel 

35 Nassau Street 
Transit Bldg., 426. Street 
Hotel Collingwood 
13 Astor Place 
Navy Yard, Brooklyn 
6 and 8 West 22d Street 
346 Broadway 
122 E. 34th Street 
120 Broadway 

55 Remsen St., Brooklyn 

25 Broad Street 

26 Exchange Place 
63-65 Wall Street 
214 Broadway 

244 West 99th street 
15 William Street 

21 Cortlandt Street 

52 Broadway 

20 Nassau Street 

26 Gramercy Park 

49 Wall Street 

31 Nassau Street 
92 Beekman Street 
115 Broadway 

24 Broad Street 

168 Montague Street, Brooklyn 

52 Broadway 
20 



NON-RESIDENT. 



Adams, David T. 
Austin, Zed H. 

Alden, William A. 



Blabon, Joseph W. 
Byrnes, Timothy E. . 
Bell, James S. . 

Belknap, Austin L. . 

Barnett, Lewis Cass 

Backus, Edward W. 
BoARDMAN, Albert J. 

Brackett, George A. 
burwell, w. e. . 
Benz, George G. 

Baker, John F. 

Capehart, Alexander 
Cavanaugh, Ralph W. 
Crosby, George H. 
Clapp, Newel H. 

Crane. Benjamin P. 

Cotton, Joseph Bell 
Chute, William Y. 

Clarke, Hovey C. 
Carpenter, Elbert L. 



Duluth, Minnesota. 

3333 2d Ave., Minneapolis, 

Minn. 
64 Clarence Ave., Minneapolis, 

Minn. 

St. Paul, Minnesota 

Minneapolis, Minn. 

Flour Exchange, Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

New York Bldg., Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

Corn Exchange Bldg., Minne- 
apolis, Minn. 

Minneapolis, Minn. 

N. W. Cor. Broad and Arch 
Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Seattle, Washington 

Baltimore, Md. 

Cor. 6th and Minnesota Sts., 
St. Paul, Minn. 

Boston, Mass. 

Washington, D. C. 

Hotel Regina, Paris, France. 

Duluth, Minnesota 

404 Nat. Ger. Am. Bank Bldg., 

St. Paul, Minn. 
Kitchi Gammi Club, Duluth, 

Minn. 
Duluth, Minn. 
Minneapolis Club, Minneapolis, 

Minn. 
West Hotel, Minneapolis, Minn. 
Minneapolis, Minn. 



Carpenter, Eucene J. 
Castle, Henry A. 
Chamberlin, Dr. Jehiei, W. 

Denslow, Dr. Le Grand N. 
Douglas, Frank M. . 
D'Autremont, Charles, Jr. 
Durment, Edmund S. 

DeMott, Howard 
Decker, Edward W, . 

Dun WOODY, William H. 

Dorr. W. R. . . . 

Earle, Horace C. 

Elwood, Lester 
Elmer, James P. 

Fairchild, Egbert N. 

Fitzgerald, Edward . 
French, William A. 

Finch, Sherman 
Goodrich, Calvin Gibson 

Goodkind, Benjamin L. 
Gooding, Orlen L. 
Gellette, George Mahlon 

Gray, Fred L. . . . 



1 5 12 Harmon PI., Minneapolis, 

Minn. 
1532 22d Street. N. W., Wasli- 

ington, D. C. 
Lowry Arcade, St. Paul, Minn. 

Somers, N. Y. 

Century Bldg., Cleveland, O. 

Duluth, Minn. 

Ger. Life Ins. Bldg., St. Paul, 

Minn. 
East Millstone, N. J. 
Northwestern National Bank, 

Minneapolis, Minn. 
206 Chamber Commerce, Min- 
neapolis, Minn. 
Englewood, N. J. 

West Hotel, Minneapolis, 

Minn. 
Minneapolis, Minn. 
St. Paul, Minn. 

Guaranty Loan Building, Min- 
neapolis, Minn. 

29 Irving Place, Buffalo, N. Y. 

44 East 6th Street, St. Paul, 
Minn. 

St. Paul, Minn. 

1815 Vine Place, Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

St. Paul, Minn. 

196 Market St., Newark, N. J. 

1008 Guaranty Bldg., Minne- 
polis, Minn. 

1220 Guaranty Bldg., Minnea- 
polis, Minn. 



Hunter, James C. 
Hancock, Walter W. 
Harrington. C. M. 

Hersey, R. F. . 
Hill, James J. 
Hill, Samuel 
Hubbard, L. P. 

Hopkins, Louis J. 
Herrick, Roy Durand 



Duluth, Minn. 

Merion Station, Pa. 

713 Chamber Commerce, Min- 
neapolis. Minn. 

St. Paul, Minn. 

St. Paul, Minn. 

Seattle. Washing^ton 

301 Guaranty Bldg., Minne- 
apolis, Minn. 

Duluth, Minn. 

35 South 8th St., Minneapolis 



Ireland, Right Rev. John St. Paul, Minn. 



Jones, H. V. 
Johnson, Charles W. 

JuDSON, Henry S. 
Janney, Thomas A. . 

Kirkbridge, George Bacon 
Kelly, John Francis 
Kirk, William Doxtater 
Kelly, Michael 
Kendrick. John William 
Kellogg, Frank B. 
Kohler, Frank J. 

Lowry, Thomas 
Langdon, Cavour S. . 

Lewis, Charles E. 

Leithhead, L. W. 

Linton, Alonzo H. . 
Ludington, Thomas E. 



Minneapolis, Minn. 
602 Bank Commerce, Minnea- 
polis. Minn. 
587 Summit Ave.. St. Paul 
Minneapolis. Minn. 

810 Arcade Bldg.. Philadelphia 

Foley Bros.. St. Paul, Minn. 

St. Paul. Minn. 

606 E. 2d, Duluth, Minn. 

Pasadena, Cal. 

St. Paul, Minn. 

Box 14, Baltimore, Md. 

Minneapolis, Minn. 

SOI N. Y. Life Bldg., Minne- 
apolis, Minn. 

Chamber Commerce, Minneap- 
olis, Minn. 

Leithhead Drug Co.. Duluth, 
Minn. ^ 

Minneapolis, Minn. 

The Colonnade. St. Paul, Minn. 



23 



Little, Henry L. 
Ladd, Henry E. 

Muu'ORD, Ernest Denman 
MuLFORD, Aaron Denman 
Merriij., Eugene A.. . 

Morton, Walter Scott 

Morrison, Addison M. 
Morrison, Clinton 

Martin, Charles J. 

Martin, William L. 

Martens, M. S. 
Magie, William Henry 
McGoLERiCK, BiSHor James 
McAuLiFFE, James 
McKey, Charles D, . 
McPherson, Angus D. 

McAllister, W. I. 

Nelson, George M. 



0"Shaughnessy, M. J. Jr. 

O'Brien, Christopher D. 

Prindle, W. M. 
Prince, Frank M. 

Palmer, William B. 



Minneapolis, Minn. 
302-3 Andrus Bldg., Minneap- 
olis, Minn. 

233 Broad St., Elizabeth, N. J. 

830 N. B'd St., Elizabeth, N. J. 

21 16 2d Avenue, Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

Bulls Bridge, Litchfield County, 
Conn. 

Mankato, Minn. 

916 Guaranty Bldg., Minne- 
apolis. Minn. 

602 South loth St., Minne- 
apolis, Minn. 

223 Ridgewood Ave., Minneap- 
olis, Minn. 

Bulls Bridge, Conn. 

Lyceum Bldg., Duluth, Minn. 

Duluth, Minn. 

Duluth, Minn. 

12 Portland St., Boston, Mass. 

2592 N. Ashland Ave., Chicago, 
111. 

Chicago, 111. 

591 Summit Ave., St. Paul, 
Mimi. 

683 Summit Ave., St. Paul, 

Minn. 
Globe Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. 

Losdale Bldg., Duluth, Minn. 
821 Groveland Ave., Minneapo- 
lis. 
Citizens' Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio 



24 



PiLLSBURY, A. F. 

Parker, John J. 
Ramsey, Wiluam A. 

Rice, Frederick E. 
Reeve, Charles McC. 
RoucHLEAU, Louis 
Rand, Alonzo T, 
Rogers, Arthur R. 

Rice, Ch arises O. 

Rand, R. R. 
Rice, Wii,i.iam A. 

Shelvin, Thomas Henry 
Schwartz, John M. . 

Severance, C. A. 
Stone, Wiluam Read, 
Stickney, Alpheus Beede 
Stevens, Hiram F. 
Smith, Frederick A. 

Sumner, Edward W. 

Smith, H. Alden 

Steele, William E. 

Shutter, Marion Daniel 

Sexton, Charles W. , 

Schurmeier, Theodore L. 
Sharood, Charles K. 



Minneapolis, Minn. 
Cleveland, Ohio 

1610 S. Dupont Ave., Minne- 
apolis, Minn. 

Union Depot, St. Paul, Minn. 

Far Hills, N. J. 

Dnluth, Minn. 

Minneapolis, Minn. 

C. A. Smith Lumber Company, 
Minneapolis, Minn. 

Washington Loan & Trust 
Bldg., Washington, D. C. 

Minneapolis, Minn. 

New Haven, Conn. 

]>,iinneapolis, Minn. 

Ger. Am. Bank Bldg., St. Paul, 
Minn. 

St. Paul, Minn. 

Duluth, Minn. 

St. Paul, Minn. 

St. Paul, Minn. 

Swedish American Nat. Bank, 
Minneapolis, Minn. 

Corn Exchange Building, Min- 
neapolis, Minn. 

1403 Harmon Place, Minne- 
apolis, Minn. 

1024 Guaranty Bldg.. Minne- 
apolis, Minn. 

1906 Park Ave., Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

Phoenix Bldg., Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

St. Paul. Minn. 

St. Paul, Minn. 



35 



Semple, Frank Bailey 

Scott, Thomas B. 

Safford, Arthur T. . 
Swift, Frederick 
Slocum, Frederick B. 

SivOAne, John D, 

Speel, Alexander Ramsey 

Vander Horck, Max P. 

Ware, Edwin M. 

^VILLIAMS, Cornelius 
Watson, H. P. 

Watson, John J. 
Ware, Howard F. 

Ware, Robert L. 

Wheelwright, John O. P. 

Whitney, Wm. Channing 

Warner, R. P. . . 

Warner, R. O. 
Washburn, William D. 
Washburn, Wm. W. D. Jr. 

Winston, William Overton 



Janney, Semple, Hill & Co., 

Minneapolis. Minn. 
30S Home Ins. Bldg., Chicago, 

111. 
Buffalo, N. Y. 

196 Market St., Newark, N. J. 
219 Edgar Place, Elizabeth, N. 

J. 

600 Summit Ave., St. Paul, 
Minn. 

1 122 Belmont Avenue, Wash- 
ington, D. C. 

Pillsbury Bldg., Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

55-56 Nat. Ger. Am. Bank 
Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. 

145 W. 5th St., St. Paul, Minn. 

Chamber of Commerce, Minne- 
apolis, Minn. 

301 Ryan Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. 
55-56 Nat. Ger. Am. Bank 

Bldg.. St. Paul, Minn. 

Ger. Life Ins. Bldg., St. Paul, 
Minn. 

801 N. Y. Life Bldg., Minne- 
apolis, Minn. 

313 Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

2.12 3d St., St. Paul, Minn. 

St. Paul, Minn. 

Fairoaks, Minneapolis, Minn. 

302 Guaranty Bldg., Minneapo- 
lis, Minn. 

1827 Portland Ave., Minneapo- 
lis, Minn. 



Wilkes, Louis Deane 

WOODWORTH, EdSON SnOW 

White, William Gardner 



202 Pioneer Press BIdg., Min- 
neapolis, Minn. 

Chamber of Commerce Bldg., 
Minneapolis, Minn. 

513 and 514 Globe Bldg., St. 
Paul, Minn. 



SViAB 141904 



